Duncan Huisman

Duncan Huisman (born 11 November 1971 in Doornspijk, Gelderland) is a Dutch racing driver. He won the Guia Race four times and the 24 Hours of Nürburgring in 2005. He claimed three titles at the Dutch Touring Car Championship in 1997, 2000 and 2002, and resulted runner-up at the 2010 and 2011 Dutch GT4 Championship. He has also competed in the FIA GT Championship and the Porsche Supercup. His older brother Patrick is also a successful racing driver.

Duncan Huisman on the podium after his victory in the 2002 Guia Race.

Touring car racing

He is three times Dutch Touring Car Champion, having won the title in 1997, 2000 and 2001 in a BMW 3 Series.

Between 2001 and 2004 he drove in the European Touring Car Championship, before it was renamed the World Touring Car Championship. In 2005 he first drove in the WTCC for the final two rounds with BMW Team UK, winning in what was only his second race. He competed for just over half a season in 2006 for BMW Team Italy/Spain finishing the season thirteenth overall. Duncan drove for the WSR-managed Team Aviva in the WTCC event in Macau at the end of 2007[1] prompting speculation that he will join Team RAC in the 2008 British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) alongside Colin Turkington following the departure of Tom Onslow-Cole to Vauxhall's VXR Racing.[2] Stephen Jelley was Onslow-Coles replacement, and Huisman returned again for just two 2008 WTCC rounds at Oschersleben for Wiechers-Sport in a BMW 320si.

Racing record

Complete World Touring Car Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team Car 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 DC Points
2005 BMW Team Holland BMW 320i ITA
1
ITA
2
FRA
1
FRA
2
GBR
1
GBR
2
SMR
1
SMR
2
MEX
1
MEX
2
BEL
1
BEL
2
GER
1
GER
2
TUR
1
TUR
2
ESP
1
ESP
2
MAC
1

6
MAC
2

1
13th 13
2006 BMW Team Italy-Spain BMW 320si ITA
1
ITA
2
FRA
1
FRA
2
GBR
1
GBR
2
GER
1
GER
2
BRA
1

11
BRA
2

16
MEX
1

21
MEX
2

11
CZE
1

18
CZE
2

9
TUR
1

5
TUR
2

10
ESP
1

7
ESP
2

2
MAC
1

2
MAC
2

13
13th 22
2007 Team AVIVA BMW 320si BRA
1
BRA
2
NED
1
NED
2
ESP
1
ESP
2
FRA
1
FRA
2
CZE
1
CZE
2
POR
1
POR
2
SWE
1
SWE
2
GER
1
GER
2
GBR
1
GBR
2
ITA
1
ITA
2
MAC
1

9
MAC
2

11
NC 0
2008 Wiechers-Sport BMW 320si BRA
1
BRA
2
MEX
1
MEX
2
ESP
1
ESP
2
FRA
1
FRA
2
CZE
1
CZE
2
POR
1
POR
2
GBR
1
GBR
2
GER
1

16
GER
2

10
EUR
1
EUR
2
ITA
1
ITA
2
JPN
1
JPN
2
MAC
1
MAC
2
24th 0

Complete GT1 World Championship results

Year Team Car 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Pos Points
2010 Mad-Croc Racing Corvette ABU
QR
ABU
CR
SIL
QR
SIL
CR
BRN
QR
BRN
CR
PRI
QR
PRI
CR
SPA
QR
SPA
CR
NÜR
QR
NÜR
CR
ALG
QR
ALG
CR
NAV
QR

15
NAV
CR

Ret
INT
QR

18
INT
CR

19
SAN
QR

DNS
SAN
CR

DNS
55th 0
gollark: Also, and this is very æ, it's still actually quite slow somehow.
gollark: But I can't tell if it's an actual bug or just because they have a slightly different dataset.
gollark: OH BEE OH APIARY FORMS, the new and old calculation methods disagree by a significant fraction of a percent.
gollark: Oh hey, the ORC GC thing crashed.
gollark: Because of the other weird Nim thing where everything has a default initialized value, you can do some fun if somewhat ill-advised tricks with it.

References

  1. Huismanracing Website Archived 2008-01-23 at the Wayback Machine
  2. http://www.vauxhall.co.uk/vx/vxr/html/team.html Vauxhall VX Racing Website (Team Profile)
Sporting positions
Preceded by
Fabrizio Giovanardi
European Touring Car Championship
Independents' Trophy winner

2003
Succeeded by
Tom Coronel
Preceded by
Ferdinand Kool
Dutch GT Championship
Champion

2013
Succeeded by
none
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